I don't know. I'm asking YOU that question.
Sulfur shows similar properties to oxygen because they are both in the same group on the periodic table (Group 16) and have the same number of valence electrons. This similarity leads to comparable chemical reactivities and bonding patterns in compounds.
The smallest particle of matter that keeps all the same properties of oxygen is an oxygen atom. If you mean oxygen gas, O2, then it would be a molecule of two oxygen atoms covalently bonded.
Water would become hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) if an extra oxygen atom is added to it. Hydrogen peroxide is a chemical compound with an additional oxygen atom compared to water, which changes its properties and reactivity.
Because it has 6 electrons in its outer shell, just like oxygen.
The oxygen atom is neutral.
oxygen typically has 8 neutrons and 8 protons and it has 8 electrons
Ozone and oxygen are a bit similar. Ozone is a 3 atom and oxygen is 2 atom.
No, it is not likely that tellurium would substitute for oxygen, since the two elements are highly dissimilar.
The atom right under it and in sodiums family; potassium.
An atom of iron has 26 protons. An atom of oxygen has 8 protons. The atoms are significantly different.
Oxygen -2 Hydrogen +1
No. The smallest particle of an element that has the properties of that element is an atom.